Scott Walker

Scott Walker is the Republican Governor of Wisconsin who, in 2011, proposed sharply curtailing the bargaining rights of public employee unions as a way to achieve budget savings. His proposal gave rise to unprecedented state-wide protests in Wisconsin.

Biography
Scott Walker is the 45th Governor of Wisconsin. He was sworn in on January 3, 2011 after defeating his Democratic candidate Tom Barrett in a close race - 52 percent to 47 percent.

Soon after being elected, Walker created a political firestorm when he introduced a biennial budget that greatly defunds state programs that aid low-income families, the elderly and children. Mass protests started in February in the state's capital, Madison, when it was discovered that the budget also sought to eliminate almost all union collective bargaining rights and enforce sweeping reforms to public workers' pensions and benefits.

It was also discovered that many of Walker's campaign contributors were big corporations that benefit from changes made in his budget. Boycotts were started against companies like M&I Bank and Kwik Trip in protest. Koch Industries was Walker's biggest contributor.

The son of a preacher, Walker grew up in the small town of Delavan, Wisconsin. He attended Marquette University in Milwaukee, WI for four years without graduating. Before Walker was elected Wisconsin governor, he was the County Executive of Milwaukee County from 2002 to 2010 and a member of the Wisconsin State Assembly from 1993 to 2002.

Walker's Milwaukee County Executive Days
Walker was elected to Milwaukee County Executive in 2002 in a special election and served in that position until his gubernatorial election in 2010. As County Executive, Walker "enacted emergency budget powers" by laying off 76 employees in an attempt to fix a budget deficit. Walker also started trying to restrict union bargaining rights before his Governor days.

"Walker believes that if the unionized employees take the wage and benefit reform, the budget gap would be closed. 'We're optimistic that if they came forward and accepted those changes that all the other employees have, we wouldn't have a gap.'"Milwaukee County Executive Scott Walker invokes authority to lay off workers, "Fox 6 News.com. March 3, 2010."

He also implemented a 35 hour workweek for county employees, "which was recently declared an overstep of his authority by the Wisconsin Court of Appeals, have actually cost the county and state money in legal fees and corrective actions."

Walker was also courted by Americans for Prosperity, the Koch-funded tea party organization, during his time as County Executive. Walker was asked to "emcee" their annual Defending the American Dream Summit. He also spoke at a 2009 AFP rally in Milwaukee that attracted thousands.

In 2009, the state striped Milwaukee County of its role in administering food aid, child care and medical assistance programs that state Health Services Secretary Karen Timberlake said "was prompted by years of county mismanagement." The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel said that state managers were installed to fix the following problems: • The county's poor performance in the programs includes answering only 5% of the hundreds of thousands of phone calls to the county's public assistance call center every month. • The county fails to process 30% of its benefit applications within the required seven days, with some families waiting weeks or months for food or health care. • In 2007, 60% of county decisions to deny food or health care benefits were overturned within two months. That resulted in benefit delays and forced families to go through time-consuming appeals or a second round of applications. • The county's high food assistance error rate means nearly one in five deserving applicants were cut off from the program in fiscal 2008.

The The Economic and Community Development Division was also eliminated under Walker. The Democratic Party of Wisconsin also reported that more than 30,000 jobs were lost in 2009 according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics in Milwaukee County.

The WI Democratic Party also released a statement stating: "After eight years of Walker’s feckless money mismanagement, Milwaukee County is on the verge of bankruptcy, according to a report by the Greater Milwaukee Committee with the structural deficit expected to climb to nearly $100 million by 2014.

2011 Wisconsin Protest Over Collective Bargaining
The Budget Repair Bill that Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker introduced in February 2011 effectively took almost all collective bargaining rights away from state, county and municipal workers. "The proposal prompted national attention and months of protests at the Capitol before it was approved by the Legislature and signed by Walker. A circuit court judge, however, has blocked its implementation."

The bill also strips some workers, such as University of Wisconsin hospital employees, of the right to collectively bargain entirely and forces public sector units to re-certify every year, taking money away from unions.

Following the hastily passed bill on March 9th in a legislative conference committee that stripped the fiscal parts of the bill to allow a vote without the missing 14 Democrats. The State Assembly and the Senate approved the edited bill and Walker signed it on March 11. The contentious Senate vote is now being debated in court for violating the Open Meetings law.

Also a result of the Budget Repair Bill was the recall efforts of 8 Republican Senators and 3 Democrat Senators.

Protest Timeline
In addition to hundreds of thousands of people rallying in Madison, Wisconsin's state capitol, to oppose Walker's budget plan, students and teachers around the state conducted walkouts, effectively shutting down entire school systems around the state. Walkouts closed Madison-area schools for days in a row.

Below are the highlights of the on-going protest against Governor Walker and his budget bill:


 * February 11, 2011 - Walker introduces his Budget Repair Bill that eliminates most collective bargaining rights for workers.
 * February 13, 2011 - The first protests draw small crowds at the capital and in front of Walker's home.
 * February 15, 2011 - Around 10,000 people gather in front of the Madison State Capitol and filling the inside of the rotunda.
 * February 19, 2011 - The first large Saturday protest sees almost 50,000 people gather around the capitol building.
 * February 22, 2011 - Union protests start in other states like Ohio and Michigan to block those state's budgets that also greatly affect workers' rights.
 * February 25, 2011 - Assembly Republicans pass Walker's budget bill at 1 a.m. in a hastily-planned committee meeting.
 * February 26, 2011 - Protests after the Assembly passing of the bill draw over 70,000 people to the capitol.
 * February 28, 2011 - Walker shuts the capitol down and tries to evict the remaining protesters who have been spending the night under the rotunda.
 * March 1, 2011 - A judge orders the capitol to be reopened.
 * March 9, 2011 - Senate Republicans bypass the 14 absent Democrats who left the state to postpone a vote on the budget, by holding a special conference committee to strip the fiscal aspects of the bill so the anti-union provisions can be voted on. The bill is then passed on the 10th.
 * March 11, 2011 - Walker signs the anti-union bill into law.
 * March 12, 2011 - Democratic senators return to Madison for a rally that drew over 80,000 people, as well as celebrities like Susan Sarandon.
 * March 15, 2011 - State Senate Majority Leader Scott Fitzgerald (R) lifts the fines against Senate Democrats, and restores their voting rights on committees, after receiving assurances that they would not flee the state again.
 * March 18, 2011 - Dane County Circuit Judge Maryann Sumi issues a temporary restraining order against the newly-passed law, forbidding its implementation and preventing Democratic Secretary of State Doug La Follette from publishing it in the Wisconsin State Journal newspaper — the final, formal step to have a law take effect.
 * April 5, 2011 - Jesse Jackson visits a protest on the anniversary of Martin Luther King Jr.'s death. The protest is attended by thousands.
 * More protests are planned for the future.

For more information, visit PRWatch's Live Blog.

Protest Timeline
In addition to tens of thousands of people rallying in Madison, Wisconsin's state capitol, to oppose Walker's budget plan, students and teachers around the state conducted walkouts, effectively shutting down entire school systems around the state. Walkouts closed Madison-area schools for days in a row.

Below are the highlights of the on-going protest against Governor Walker and his budget bill:


 * February 11, 2011 - Walker introduces his Budget Repair Bill that eliminates most collective bargaining rights for workers.
 * February 13, 2011 - The first protests draw small crowds at the capital and in front of Walker's home.
 * February 15, 2011 - Around 10,000 people gather in front of the Madison State Capitol and filling the inside of the rotunda.
 * February 19, 2011 - The first large Saturday protest sees almost 50,000 people gather around the capitol building.
 * February 22, 2011 - Union protests start in other states like Ohio and Michigan to block those state's budgets that also greatly affect workers' rights.
 * February 25, 2011 - Assembly Republicans pass Walker's budget bill at 1 a.m. in a hastily-planned committee meeting.
 * February 26, 2011 - Protests after the Assembly passing of the bill draw over 70,000 people to the capitol.
 * February 28, 2011 - Walker shuts the capitol down and tries to evict the remaining protesters who have been spending the night under the rotunda.
 * March 1, 2011 - A judge orders the capitol to be reopened.
 * March 9, 2011 - Senate Republicans bypass the 14 absent Democrats who left the state to postpone a vote on the budget, by holding a special conference committee to strip the fiscal aspects of the bill so the anti-union provisions can be voted on. The bill is then passed on the 10th.
 * March 11, 2011 - Walker signs the anti-union bill into law.
 * March 12, 2011 - Democratic senators return to Madison for a rally that drew over 80,000 people, as well as celebrities like Susan Sarandon.
 * March 15, 2011 - State Senate Majority Leader Scott Fitzgerald (R) lifts the fines against Senate Democrats, and restores their voting rights on committees, after receiving assurances that they would not flee the state again.
 * March 18, 2011 - Dane County Circuit Judge Maryann Sumi issues a temporary restraining order against the newly-passed law, forbidding its implementation and preventing Democratic Secretary of State Doug La Follette from publishing it in the Wisconsin State Journal newspaper — the final, formal step to have a law take effect.
 * April 5, 2011 - Jesse Jackson visits a protest on the anniversary of Martin Luther King Jr.'s death. The protest is attended by thousands.
 * More protests are planned for the future.

For more information, visit PRWatch's Live Blog.

Scott Walker Budget
Governor Scott Walker introduced his budget bill in late February and plans on cutting $1.5 billion in aid to public schools and local government, transportation and environmental issues and unions. But, it avoids any tax or fee increases, furloughs or widespread layoffs. Walker says this bill will help confront a projected $3.6 billion deficit the state has acquired.

The Wisconsin State Journal clearly outlined the two different bills that have been discussed in the media: The two-year Budget Repair Bill and the Biennial Bill (2011-2013), which projects cuts and changes to come (the fist of January 2011). "The Senate and Assembly have passed — and Walker has signed — the part of the budget repair bill that decreases public employee compensation and limits collective bargaining rights. The Legislature still must act on other parts of the budget repair bill, including the debt restructuring. Simultaneously, work now has begun on the next biennial budget bill, which will address taxing and spending that is yet to come — in this case, beginning July 1, 2011, Dresang said."

This budget is not exclusive to Wisconsin, its changes and effects are mirrored in 16 other states that are using their majority Republican Senates to pass extreme laws in their new budget bills. In Ohio, Pennsylvania, Michigan and others, new Republican-led state governments are voting on proposed deep cuts to essential programs and plan to privatize publicly-owned and funded services. Below is a list of the cuts being made in Wisconsin and how they will affect the average citizen.

Proposed cuts to healthcare
The Wisconsin Council on Children and Families reported that the Budget Repair Bill grants the Department of Health Services the power to make decisions that would change state laws dealing with medical care for children, parents and childless adults; prescription drug plans for seniors; nursing home care for the elderly; and long-term care for the elderly and the disabled outside of nursing homes. BadgerCare Plus and BadgerCare Core plans, Family Care and SeniorCare, are programs that could see changes and cuts under the proposed plan. The budget adds nearly $1.3 billion to Walker's two-year plan.


 * "The biennial budget bill cuts about $500 million (GPR) from Medicaid (including $111 million GPR from Family Care)."
 * BadgerCare, a program for low-income families and children, will take decision-making authority away from legislature and give it the Governor. This also affects the people’s chance to voice their opinion on proposed changes.
 * SeniorCare members will also be required to enroll in the federal program.
 * Title V Maternal and Child Health program are eliminated under the plan. Currently, uninsured men and women can currently receive this care, which includes cervical and prostate cancer screenings, access to birth control and testing and treatment for sexually transmitted diseases.
 * The "contraceptive equity" law passed in 2009 that requires health insurance plans in the state that cover prescription drugs to include contraceptives will be repealed.
 * Uninsured men between the ages of 15 and 44 will be taken out of the family planning program of BadgerCare.

Proposed cuts to education
Governor Walker is proposing $900 million worth of cuts in K-12 school aid over the next two years. This will continue to move the state further from its former commitment to cover two-thirds of the costs of public schools. Higher Education will also be affected. "University tuition is expected to increase by 5.5 percent each year for the UW System, and 20% or more over the biennium for UW Madison."


 * The plan lifts the cap on the number of students who can participate in the Milwaukee School Choice program.
 * It ends state funding for Advanced Placement courses and "science, technology, engineering and mathematics programs.”
 * Walker's budget mandates a 5.5 percent cut in per-pupil local education spending. That comes out to approximately $550 per pupil. No district will be permitted to maintain its current level of property tax-based funding for education or be able to increase that tax to offset state cuts. The exact dollar amount would also be greater for higher-revenue districts and lower for low-revenue districts.
 * The bill increases the amount of money spent on Milwaukee's private school voucher system by making more city students eligible for the program.
 * The budget transfers UW-Madison into a quasi-public authority, facing deep cuts in state funding. This could also later happen to UW-Milwaukee.
 * Other public universities face an 11 percent budget cuts and get none of the cost-saving tools UW-Madison would get by splitting from the UW System.

Cuts to workers' rights
Under Governor Walker’s new budget repair bill, unions and state workers will see some of the biggest restrictions and cuts. The Wisconsin State Journal reported that:


 * The bill requires most public workers to pay half of their pension costs. This factors out to about 5.8 percent of state workers’ pay and 12 percent of their health care costs. This does not apply to police, firefighters and state troopers.
 * Raises will be limited to inflation and contracts would be limited to one year. Wages would be frozen until a new contract is settled.
 * Non-law enforcement unions will loose their bargaining rights over everything but wages.
 * Collective bargaining units are required to take annual votes to maintain certification as a union. Employers would be prohibited from collecting union dues, and members of collective bargaining units would not be required to pay dues. Changes would be effective upon expiration of existing contracts.
 * It also authorizes appointing agencies to terminate any employees who are absent for three days without approval or any employees participating in an organized action to stop or slow work if the governor has declared a state of emergency.

Attack on labor unions Walker called his union-busting measure a "budget repair bill" and portrayed it as a way to keep more people from being forced to apply for unemployment compensation. His proposal drew outrage from labor unions in Wisconsin, and gave rise to unprecedented, huge protests at the Wisconsin state capitol. Elements of Walker's proposal include limiting state employees' wage increases to the rate of inflation unless approved in a voter referendum. State workers other than police, fire, and inspectors would lose many of their bargaining rights and could opt out of paying union dues after current contracts expire, with dues no longer collected automatically. Wisconsin state workers would have to raise the amount they contribute to their pensions to 5.8 percent of salary, and double their contribution to their health insurance premiums to 12.6 percent of their salary.

Local governments
The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel reported that the Budget Bill will cause cities and counties across Wisconsin will see their aid cut by $96 million, or nearly 12 percent on average, over the next two years.


 * The bill would freeze property taxes for local governments, allowing them to increase only for the construction of new homes or buildings.
 * Local governments will no longer be required to operate recycling programs and will no longer get state subsidies for these programs.
 * It also reduces their payments to maintain local roads by 10 percent.
 * The bill requires local governments that don't have civil-service systems to create an employee grievance system within months. Those local civil-service systems would have to address grievances for employee termination, employee discipline and workplace safety.

PUBLIC SAFETY AND CORRECTIONS The budget focuses on hiring more staff for the State Crime Laboratory, investigating child pornography cases and enforcing tougher drunken driving laws.


 * Includes $1 million for raises for prosecutors.
 * Eliminates the early prison release program.
 * Consolidation of correctional schools: Closing Ethan Allen School in Wales and South Oaks Girls School in Union Grove. Their operations would be moved to Lincoln Hills School in Lincoln County.

TAX CUTS AND THE ECONOMY Walker has approved over $100 million in tax cuts over the next two years. This is on top of $140 billion already granted to corporations in three bills Walker signed in his first month of office in January.


 * Investors will be provided with lower state taxes on capital gains for investing in Wisconsin businesses.
 * It gives multistate corporations a larger window in using losses to offset their tax liability. That would lower taxes by $46 million over two years.
 * Provides $196 million for the Wisconsin Economic Development Corp., the partly private entity that is replacing the state Department of Commerce.
 * Companies that relocate to Wisconsin won't have to pay income taxes for two years.
 * Eliminates state income taxes on contributions made to health savings accounts.
 * Ending inflation adjustment costs for low-income households under the Homestead Tax Credit that will result in a $8 million cut. "The Homestead Credit provides targeted property tax relief for about 250,000 low-income households, including both owners and renters. The Governor proposes repealing the annual adjustments, which will cut the credits by $2 million in tax year 2011 and $6 million in 2012. The cuts will average about $8 per recipient in tax year 2011 and $24 the next year. Those amounts will grow steadily in future years."

ENVIRONMENT The Wisconsin State Journal reported that "the former head of the Division of Water in the state Department of Natural Resources said rollbacks of clean water regulations in Gov. Scott Walker’s proposed budget could put the state in violation of federal laws. Walker has proposed reducing standards for phosphorus which were set in a rule passed by the Natural Resources Board last year. His budget also includes a plan to eliminate municipal stormwater standards that regulate pollutants running off streets, parking lots and other urban surfaces."


 * Eliminates rolling back regulations to control phosphorus pollution in line with neighboring states' rules.
 * Eliminates payments to local governments that lose property tax revenues following DNR land stewardship purchases.
 * It lowers funding to the Department of Natural Resources by nearly 16 percent.
 * Lowers support for local transit by 10 percent.

Walker and Corporate Handouts
Changes to the Consolidated Reporting law that was passed in 2009 by the Democrat-led Wisconsin Senate closed the "Las Vegas Loophole" which allowed companies to start subsidiaries and file separate tax returns for each one. In theory, this allowed large corporations to form subsidiaries in other states to avoid taxation. The changes in the law allow Walker to keep his promise of not repealing the consolidated reporting law, but the changes are essentially making the law null and void.

After 2009, when the reporting law started, a company had to file one tax return instead of several. If they had substantial loses on an investment that surpassed the yearly limit, they could "carry over" the rest for the next year and the next and so on. They were also allowed to spread around the "carry over" to other companies under the main corporation after 2009. Robert Kraig on WTDY Talk Radio's "Sly in the Morning" reported that after the 2009 law passed, the Department of Revenue had the authority to investigate any corporations and subsidiaries who it felt suspicious of avoiding taxes and disallow them if they were found to be created for that purpose.

Walker's budget includes a change in the consolidated reporting law that now forbids the Department of Revenue from investigating companies and disallowing them. This change is also retroactive back to the date the law was first enacted in 2009. With the change in the law, corporations can still spread the carry overs around, but they can start adding to the total of the loss from years before 2009. This benefits companies like M&I, who had losses starting in 1997 based on tax info obtained by the Institute for Wisconsin's Future.

Walker's "Broke" Stance Doesn't Hold Up
Walker has repeatedly said that Wisconsin is "broke."

"I don't have anything to negotiate," Walker said Feb. 11, 2011, the day he unveiled his budget-repair bill, aimed at closing a $137 million gap in the budget that ends June 30, 2011. "We are broke in this state. We have been broke for years."

The Institute for One Wisconsin released a study in April 2011 refuting this claim.

"Governor Walker’s insistence that Wisconsin is broke and his attacks on worker’s rights and proposed cuts to education, health care and public safety ignore the elephant in the room: that vast amounts of income and wealth have shifted dramatically to those at the top of the income ladder.

Wisconsin’s Gross Domestic Product has steadily increased over the past twenty years and Wisconsin has plenty of overall wealth. The problem is this wealth has been redistributed upwards, to those at the top of the income ladder, while Wisconsin’s tax structure is dependent on the middle class.

Here are just a few of the highlights from the report:

* In Fighting Bob La Follette’s day, corporations paid 70 percent of the state revenues, today it is 6.9 percent and 2/3 of Wisconsin corporations don't even pay state income taxes. The cuts to the business tax burden of the past 30 years have accompanied a steady drop in American manufacturing jobs and stagnancy in American wages.

* From the end of WWII to the mid-80s, the top income tax rate in Wisconsin was 10 percent or higher most years, but now it is only 7.75 percent.

* A “Pain Index,” based on the percent of a county's median household income goes to pay state and local taxes finds that 15 counties, including Brown, La Crosse, Kenosha, Racine, Eau Claire and Rock Counties, are in “severe pain” because over 13 percent of their median income goes toward state and local taxes. This comes at the same time the burdens for business have fallen, particularly on property taxes.

* At the Federal level, billionaires pay a lower tax rate than the average family, potential revenue that is lost also to the state. And, like Wisconsin, Federal revenues have not kept pace with the Federal GDP.

* The largest expenditure by the Federal government is not defense spending or education, but “tax expenditures” on the wealthy. (“Tax expenditures” is the budgetary term the Joint Finance Committee uses for tax breaks and loopholes that have the same budgetary effect as any other spending)."

Read more about the report here.

Funders
The Wisconsin Democracy Campaign (WDC) is a nonpartisan, nonprofit organization that tracks money in politics. WDC's data shows that Walker's major contributors include a diversity of national and state-based firms, including Koch Industries, AT&T, Wal-Mart, John Deere Tractor, Johnsonville Brats, Miller/Coors, Kwik Trip, Sargento Cheese, and SC Johnson & Sons (producers of Windex, Glade, Pledge etc).

Relationship to Koch Industries
OpenSecrets.org (the Center for Responsive Politics) reports that Koch Industries donated $15,000 on July 8, 2010 and another $28,000 on September 27, 2010 to the Friends of Scott Walker political action committee, to help elect Scott Walker as Governor of Wisconsin. Koch Pipeline Company, L.P. operates a pipeline system that crosses Wisconsin, part of the nearly 4,000 miles of pipelines owned or operated by the company. Walker has taken more than $70,000 from gas and pipeline companies, and opposed a high speed rail project that would have reduced Wisconsin's dependence on oil

David Koch also "personally donated $1 million to the Republican Governors Association (RGA) in June of [2010]. This was the most he had ever personally given to that group.... The RGA in turn spent $5 million in the race, mostly on TV ads attacking Walker's political opponent, Democratic Mayor Tom Barrett.... According to Open Secrets, Koch Industries was one of the top ten donors to the RGA in 2010, giving $1,050,450 to help with governors' races, like Walker's."

But this doesn't tell the whole story: "David Koch was the founder and chairman of a front group called Citizens for a Sound Economy, which received at least $12 million from the Koch Family Foundations and which is the predecessor of the group Americans for Prosperity." Americans for Prosperity, which is also funded by the Kochs, funded pro-Walker protests in Madison during the battle over his controversial "Budget Reform Bill" after running "issue ads" in Wisconsin during the 2010 election cycle. AFP "featured him at its tea party rally in Wisconsin in September 2009, when he was running for the Republican nomination for governor.

"Americans for Prosperity also ran millions of dollars in ads on a 'spending crisis' (a crisis it did not run ads against when Republicans were spending the multi-billion dollar budget surplus into a multi-trillion dollar deficit), and it selected Wisconsin as one of the states for those ads in the months before the election. It also funded a 'spending revolt' tour in Wisconsin last fall through its state 'chapter.'....

"What is the return desired for their investment? It looks like the first dividend Walker wants to pay, through the help of the Koch-subsidized cheerleaders from Americans for Prosperity, is a death knell for unions and the rights of workers to organize."

When Governor Walker testified in front of the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee, chaired by Darrell Issa (R-California), on April 14th, 2011, Rep. Jackie Speier (D-California) "asked Walker how much money he had received from the Koch Brothers. When Walker demurred -- 'I got contributions from 50,000 people' -- Speier asked if he returned their phone calls, too, and reminded him that Koch Industries contributed $43,000."

Prank call from "David Koch"
On February 23, 2011, blogger Ian Murphy of the Buffalo Beast in Buffalo, New York phoned Walker posing as conservative billionaire businessman David Koch, one of Walker's major campaign contributors, and a major funder of the anti-union group Americans for Prosperity. In the call, Murphy posing as Koch makes derogatory statements about unions and Democrats. When the fake Koch suggested placing "troublemakers" among the crowd of protesters who have been swarming the Wisconsin state capitol for eight consecutive days protesting Walkers' anti-union "budget repair bill," (presumably to discredit them), Walker admits, "We thought about that." Walker then says he concluded that real unrest might swing public opinion against him and that it was better to let the protests play out, saying the media would eventually lose interest. Walker never said he decided not to place troublemakers because doing so was morally or ethically wrong, or illegal. Walker drew greater scrutiny and questions from public officials over these statements, and became an object or criticism for taking the call, since at the time he had refused repeated calls from Democrats trying to reach him to discuss the legislation he was proposing.

Allegations of political patronage
Even though Walker has claimed Wisconsin is broke in part because public employees are overpaid, Walker's administration gave an $81,500/year job to Brian Deschane, a man in his mid-20s, with no college degree, very little management experience, no environmental experience and two convictions for drunken driving. Deschane's father, Jerry Deschane, is executive vice president and a lobbyist for the Wisconsin Builders Association (WBA), whose PAC gave Walker $29,000 during the 2010 gubernatorial election. The donation made the WBA one of the top five donor PACs to Walker's campaign. In addition, members of the Wisconsin Builders Association donated over $92,000 to Walker's campaign over the last two years, for a total of $121,652. The younger Deschane held a part-time job at the Wisconsin Builder's Association prior to being awarded his job in Walker's administration. His job is in the Wisconsin Department of Examining Boards and Regulatory Authority. A Walker cabinet member hired Brian Deschane for a state job that paid $64,728/ year. Shortly after, he was moved to a position that paid $16,500 a year more, despite having only put in a few months with the state by then.

Sourcewatch resources

 * Wisconsin Governor Walks on Workers, Brendan Fischer, PRWatch.org, February 16, 2011
 * Koch Industries

External resources

 * Meet Scott Walker, biography
 * The Koch Connection in Scott Walker's War on Working People, blog, PRWatch.org, February 18, 2011
 * Wisconsin Council on Children and Families
 * Milwaukee Journal Sentinel Budget Coverage